A waiter serves dumplings for customers at a restaurant in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 22, 2010, also the day of Dongzhi, the traditional Chinese winter solstice festival. People in north China have a tradition of eating dumplings on the festival to protect their ears from frostbite. (Xinhua/Wang Dan)
People queue to eat dumplings outside a restaurant in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 21, 2010, also the day of Dongzhi, the traditional Chinese winter solstice festival. People in north China have a tradition of eating dumplings on the festival to protect their ears from frostbite. (Xinhua/Liu Shuang)
A waiter serves dumplings for customers at a restaurant in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 22, 2010, also the day of Dongzhi, the traditional Chinese winter solstice festival. People in north China have a tradition of eating dumplings on the festival to protect their ears from frostbite. (Xinhua/Wang Dan)
Chefs make dumplings at a restaurant in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 22, 2010, also the day of Dongzhi, the traditional Chinese winter solstice festival. People in north China have a tradition of eating dumplings on the festival to protect their ears from frostbite. (Xinhua/Wang Dan)
A chef makes dumplings at a restaurant in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 22, 2010, also the day of Dongzhi, the traditional Chinese winter solstice festival. People in north China have a tradition of eating dumplings on the festival to protect their ears from frostbite. (Xinhua/Wang Dan)
People in north China have a tradition of eating dumplings on Dongzhi, the traditional Chinese winter solstice festival, which falls this year on Dec. 22, to protect their ears from frostbite.xxxwww.Chinakindnesstour.com